People and businesses are slowly moving forward for better social sustainability and not solely profit. Each year, there is a growing awareness for the need for sociability in the environment. Human beings thrive in community settings. Today’s developers are taking this into account. They are creating new projects that will benefit their residents, as well as the place and the environment. It is important to invest in the younger generations, making their homes social, livable, healthy and supportive. As residents, they carry a social responsibility to make it a socially sustainable home.
Social Sustainability is the Future
In first-world countries there has been no momentous development in eminence of life in the last 40 years despite substantial improvements in technological expansion and extensive growths in consumption. Were we to reduce consumption back down to what the community could provision in imperishability, there would be a minimal – but foreseeable – decline in value of life. To counter-act that, there would have to be an eloquent surge in social and human enlargement to ensure that the costs and benefits felt as a result of change do not land disproportionately within the community (i.e. social justice).
It’s important for each one of us to be sustainable within the community we live in and in a larger perspective in the country we call home. This benefits the quality of living for not just you, but the people around you. Social sustainability requires ecological, economic, political and cultural sustainability. In this sense, what is described as social sustainability encompasses everything we do as humans. This includes our living arrangements.
Thriving in Close-Knit Communities
Younger generations focused on the growth of these movements give each other equal opportunities and thrive together. Social sustainability is about putting things into perspective. If you think back in general terms, packs are always communities. And developers are taking note of this.
That is why projects such as UNITE in Tulum are slowly coming to light. These projects are based on social sustainability and the creation of spaces for communities. The investor here is not the end of the chain. Millennials will rent out these spaces from investors. These are people interested in co-living, co-working and spending time together. The end product will be used by generations that want to work together in creating new projects, while still enjoying the luxuries of a high-end home.
“Social sustainability occurs when the formal and informal processes, systems, structures, and relationships actively support the capacity of current and future generations to create healthy and livable communities. Socially sustainable communities are equitable, diverse, connected and democratic and provide a good quality of life.â€
That is how the Western Australia Council of Social Services defines it. And that is the base of UNITE in Tulum. So, subscribe to our blog and newsletter to keep informed on the development and launching of UNITE.
And remember, at Top Mexico Real Estate…we make it happen!